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C18200 Chromium Copper

CDA 182, CA18200, RWMA CLASS 2, CuCrZr, TH04 TEMPER, MALLORY 100

*Hardness conversions are approximate

**Test values are nominal approximations and depend on specimen size and orientation. Typical  for .500" rod solution heat treated and aged (500C-3 hrs.)

The values listed above represent reasonable approximations suitable for general engineering use. Due to commercial variations in composition and to manufacturing limitations, they should not be used for specification purposes. See applicable ASTM specification references.

C18200 Chromium Copper RWMA Class 2 is a heat treatable, corrosion resistant alloy which combines high electrical conductivity with high strength. Class 2 chrome copper is a superior resistance welding electrode material specifically recommended for high-level production spot welding and seam welding of clean mild steels, low alloy steels, low conductivity brasses, and bronzes. Typical applications include projection welding dies, seam welder shafts and bearings, flash and butt welding dies, resistance welding electrodes, spot welding tips, seam welding wheels, electrode holder jaws, cable connectors, current carrying structural members, electrical switch gears and electrical and thermal conductors requiring greater strength than copper.

C18200 chromium copper
copper plates

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What's Driving
Metal Prices

Factors creating the on-going surge in copper prices and base metal prices.

The U.S. imposed a 50% Section 232 tariff on the copper content of semi-finished and derivative copper products, effective August 1, 2025. These tariffs aim to bolster domestic production but create complexities for businesses in pricing, sourcing, and compliance, affecting global copper markets. 

In addition copper costs are soaring due to massive demand from the energy transition (EVs, renewables, grid) and AI data centers colliding with slow mine supply growth, production disruptions (labor, technical issues), aging mines, and government policies like tariffs, creating a structural supply deficit. 

Tin prices jumped to a record level due to a severe, ongoing global supply squeeze from mine disruptions (DRC, Myanmar, Indonesia) and increasing demand driven by its critical role in electronics (solder), green energy tech, and packaging, creating a significant market deficit and attracting speculative investment. Supply chain issues, including export permit delays and political instability in key producing regions, combined with growing recognition of tin's necessity for the energy transition, fueled a rally to multi-year highs in late 2025 and early 2026. 

Nickel prices are rising due to anticipated supply cuts from major producer Indonesia, tighter quotas, increased demand from stainless steel and EV battery sectors (despite some LFP shifts), speculative buying, and broader market strength in metals, with investors reacting to policy signals and potential disruptions.

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